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What Does The Bible Say About Sowing Bad Seeds? Series
Contributed by Chris Swanson on Sep 15, 2024 (message contributor)
Summary: Have we become mingled with the world? If so, have we darkened the light of Christ so that the world cannot see Him? Have we become rotten as Christians?
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Let us begin by turning to Leviticus 19:1-37 and reading about The Mingled Seed.
The online free dictionary defines the word mingle as – to mix or bring together in combination, to be or become mixed or united, to associate or take part with others. The past tense form is mingled, which means the mixing has taken place, it has happened.
As we look at today’s scripture, it is telling us that something does not need to be mixed with something else. Is it specifically speaking of not having hybrid animals and plants?
In Deuteronomy 22:9-11, these were practical laws to help set up everyday habits that were good for living. Planting two crops side by side together could be detrimental to one crop. As one crop could be stronger, growing taller than the other one, which would deprive the other of vital nutrients. You would not be able to plow a field evenly if there was an ox and a donkey harnessed together. The two types of cloth would launder and wear differently, which could reduce the amount of time of the garment ‘s usefulness.
In Matthew 9:16-17, here the garment reflects the outward common life of a sinful person. The new cloth represents righteousness and holiness. The two pieces of cloth cannot be sewn together which could cause something worse to happen. The new wine was put into new goatskins because as the new wine fermented it stretched the goatskin. Putting new wine into an older goatskin could cause the older goatskin to burst.
In Matthew 13:36-40, we learn about the parables of the tares and wheat. What happens when we try to put the two together?
We cannot feast at the Lord’s table and at the table of the devil. Eating at either table means that we identify either with Christ or the devil. We cannot follow both. It is either one or the other. There can be no compromise. 1 Corinthians 10:21
Matthew 6:24 & Luke 16:13 say basically the same thing, that no servant can serve two masters. Man will either hate one and love the other; or he will hold to one and despise the other.
This is and should be simple enough for anyone to understand. We cannot serve two masters. How is it that some Christians try to blend both lifestyles together? It does not work. We cannot be fully serving Christ when we are still tiptoeing around with the world. Heavenly values and earthly values contradict each other.
By being born again we take hold of the incorruptible seed. When it is planted it should be watered, fed, and nurtured with the Word of God, so that we are able to bear good fruit. 1 Peter 1:23
When we look at these scriptures from a spiritual point of view, we see that we cannot mix the old sinful man with the new righteous man. When we accept Christ as our personal Savior, we are to put away our old lifestyle. God was instructing Israel to be separate from the nations surrounding it, physically and spiritually. Christians today are to sustain spiritual segregation from all sin.
The key point is for Christians to stay spiritually pure and not mix with the sin of the world.
Now we will turn to Joel 1:13-20 and read about The Rotten Seed.
Joel was a prophet to the country of Judah, otherwise called the Northern Kingdom. The motivation behind this book was to caution Judah of God's approaching judgment due to their transgressions and to encourage them to turn around to God. Why? Individuals of Judah had become prosperous and self-satisfied. Underestimating God, they had gone to conceit, excessive admiration, and sin. Joel cautions them that this sort of way of life will definitely cut down God's judgment.
In the first twelve verses, Joel predicts a plague of locusts that was to come. What do locusts do? They eat every green thing in sight. They can devour acres of crops in a manner of minutes. Now let us look at this passage of Scripture again.
A FAST was a timeframe when no food was eaten and individuals moved toward God with lowliness, distress for transgression, and pressing supplication. In the Old Testament, individuals frequently abstained during seasons of catastrophe to concentrate on God and exhibit their shift in perspective and genuine commitment (Judges 20:26; 1 Kings 21:27; Ezra 8:21; Jonah 3:5).
The “Day of the Lord” is a typical expression in the Old Testament and in the book of Joel (2:1, 2:11, 2:31, 3:14). It generally alludes to some unprecedented occurring, regardless of whether a current occasion (like a plague of locusts), a near future event (like the annihilation of Jerusalem or the enemy nations defeat), or the last time of history when God will overcome every one of the powers of evil.